COMMENTARY: Dominica’s Carnival Festival, the ‘Real Mas’; 2019 and beyond……

‘Real Mas’ 2019 revelers

Traditionally, major festivals have been mediums for bringing about change. The same is true today. Festivals allow people to not only speak about daily living but also to give voice to their inner griefs, resentments and joys. Today like in times past festivals carried peace and conflict. The masks and the songs can teach or curse while also highlighting issues to which authorities must respond or change.

Contrary to what we believe, the complex of ideas and practices that distinguish the festival we know as Carnival and call the “Real Mas” did originate in Africa. Evidence of this African festival complex can be found on the continent particularly Egypt as far back as 6000 years ago. This festival complex was subsequently adapted by Greece then the rest of Europe including Christian Rome while at the same time, continuing to thrive in other parts of the African continent. These two radically different streams clashed on the Caribbean slave plantations giving birth to the Dominican adaptation that we now call the “Real Mas”.

Kimani Nehusi in his essay ‘The Origins of Carnival’ describes the Wosirian Drama Festival which took place 6000 years ago on the banks of the Nile in Egypt. Those Egyptians (Africans) committed three to five days between the old and new year to the suspension of all human laws; no ordinary business was conducted. The suspension of social conventions and political order coupled with the FREEDOM of expression were the order of those three to five days. Interestingly, that festival was intimately connected with their agricultural rituals but more importantly signified a periodic return to NATURE, a time to let go of restrictions, tensions, neuroses and social conventions.

During Transatlantic Slavery the “carne-vale” (carne for flesh and vale for bye) festival signified for our European Christian enslavers a period of lascivious partying (‘jamming and wining’) in a jamboree of sexual excess as they bid good bye to the flesh in preparation for the restrictions of the Lenten period.

In the early post-emancipation period, our African and Kalinago ancestors used the festival complex not only to celebrate liberation from the inhumanity of chattel slavery and white supremacy; but also, to reconstruct and reassemble the remnants of their religious, spiritual and cultural history to ensure their survival and future resistance.

In my view, Dominica’s attempts to progress in the recent past are characterized by a lack of clarity of purpose and direction; somewhere, we seemed to have lost our moorings. I think that this lack of clarity with regards to the PURPOSE and FUNCTION of the “Real Mas” in contemporary Dominica, partly explains why our carnival continues to be bedeviled by the same yearly conflicts and challenges.

There seems to be a sort of schizophrenia, fluctuating between a ‘Mas’ of spectacle with a presumed economic benefit versus an unconscious connection to unknown and current realities. These realities include the ugly and painful memories of enslavement, persistent psychological abuses, psychiatric pathologies, religious and political persecution and the naked exploitation of national patrimony and labor for the profit of an elite few.

The 2019 organizers seemed to be struggling with the quandary of superficially holding on to the traditional aspect of the “Real Mas,” (eg.sensay) only for its assumed economic benefit and less for its revolutionary mandate of explosive creativity, inventiveness and dynamism. Hence the appalling lack of financial investment in the traditional aspects of the ‘Mas’ in 2019. The organizers must have also grappled with an older generation’s difficulty with internalizing contemporary aspects of the ‘Mas’. These would have included the bouyon music from the electronic bands, scantily clad bodies ‘in their faces’ and the flagrant use of mind-altering substances by both young and old revelers.  Does this reflect their ignorance of the psychological and spiritual aspects of the Festival? Have they chosen to forget the democratic ownership of the road, the right to freedom of expression, and the joy of just BEING which were embraced by the oppressed majority on the carnival Mondays and Tuesdays of the past?

I do hope that as the organizers of the ‘Real Mas’ pursue the prescribed postmortems and plan for 2020 they will CHANGE and embrace the spirit of  Sankofa; a return to the past for guidance and clarity with regards to the PURPOSE and FUNCTION of the ‘Real Mas’ in the future Dominican society.

May the spirits of the ancestors be pleased.

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10 Comments

  1. Kalineg
    March 29, 2019

    The devil is having a full life on these women, their looks tell it all!!!

    • Pablov
      March 31, 2019

      Oh the female body IS the most amazing creation…mwwa, u can clearly see beauty of the tab-coco, allu men now a days too like to see bodies of… ..men :oops:

  2. Truth be Told
    March 28, 2019

    Obesity on display!

  3. jaded
    March 28, 2019

    Maybe we are just trying too hard to narrow the scope, purpose and definition of Dominica’s carnival. Carnival is a free expression of one’s self and maybe it should simply be just that. As long as everyone is having fun, I say, let it be. But we should properly edit the promotional videos and avoid the salaciousness.

  4. Nature Isle
    March 28, 2019

    These videos cannot bring in a single international tourist to Dominica.

  5. Harvey
    March 28, 2019

    Now that the party is over, these half naked women enjoy looking at themselves? In stead of looking sexy they are really upsetting. I really hope that these women are not mothers whose children have to see that level of decadence.

  6. Toneh
    March 27, 2019

    We need to embrace what is uniquely Dominican. We keep trying to compete with Trinidad Carnival. If we learn to appreciate OUR culture we can then be ambassadors to invite others to come celebrate with us. Same goes for our tourism sector. We do not understand and appreciate what IS Dominica.

    • Francisco Etienne-Dods Telemaque
      March 28, 2019

      You are not saying anything!Have you  ever been to Carnival in Trinidad, or any place outside of Dominica?

      What these women have done is no different to what people in Trinidad, Brazil and other places does, even if the costume they chose are cheap bathing suits; but the reality is that in Carnival the beauty of it all is half naked women gyrating and  showing skin in the streets.

       What is wrong with that?

      Now the women here are not spring chickens;  they are women in their fifties, big and out of shape; but, apart from that I do not see anything wrong with the way they are dressed to play mass; Dominica culture does not have squat to do with how they played mass!

      Poverty restricts everything, in Trinidad a costume can run into several hundreds of dollars, even thousands.

      People use what they can afford in Dominica.

      That is our culture, would you prefer to see them in sugar bags as in the past?

      • Pablov
        March 29, 2019

        OMG, that’s the second time you have written something sensible. 3 is a charm, all we ask is one more. Lol … Please.

  7. Romeo
    March 26, 2019

    I think that our carnival promotional video shows too much vulgarity. Man jamming on woman as if they are having sex and also woman jamming on woman as if they are having sex. This is not what the world needs to see when we are inviting them to come to our carnival with their Family.

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